Excerpt: "President Trump's voting commission stumbled into public view this week, issuing a sweeping request for nationwide voter data that drew sharp condemnation from election experts and resistance from more than two dozen states that said they cannot or will not hand over all of the data."

resident Trump’s voting commission stumbled into public view this week, issuing a sweeping request for nationwide voter data that drew sharp condemnation from election experts and resistance from more than two dozen states that said they cannot or will not hand over all of the data.

The immediate backlash marked the first significant attention to the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity since Trump started it last month and followed through on a vow to pursue his own unsubstantiated claims that voter fraud is rampant and cost him the popular vote in the presidential election. The White House has said the commission will embark upon a “thorough review of registration and voting issues in federal elections,” but experts and voting rights advocates have pilloried Trump for his claims of widespread fraud, which studies and state officials alike have not found. They say that they fear the commission will be used to restrict voting.

Those worries intensified this week after the commission sent letters to 50 states and the District on Wednesday asking for a trove of information, including names, dates of birth, voting histories and, if possible, party identifications. The letters also asked for evidence of voter fraud, convictions for election-related crimes and recommendations for preventing voter intimidation — all within 16 days.

While the Trump administration has said it is just requesting public information, the letters met with swift — and sometimes defiant — rejection. By Friday, 25 states were partially or entirely refusing to provide the requested information; some said state laws prohibit releasing certain details about voters, while others refused to provide any information because of the commission’s makeup and backstory.

“This entire commission is based on the specious and false notion that there was widespread voter fraud last November,” Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) said in a statement. “At best this commission was set up as a pretext to validate Donald Trump’s alternative election facts, and at worst is a tool to commit large-scale voter suppression.”

California, a state Trump singled out for “serious voter fraud,” also refused to participate. Alex Padilla, the California secretary of state, said providing data “would only serve to legitimize the false and already debunked claims of massive voter fraud.”

Vice President Pence, who is chairman of the commission, hosted a conference call with the group’s members Wednesday morning, three weeks before they are scheduled to have their first meeting in Washington. During the call, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach (R), the vice chairman, told the other members about the letters.

A spokesman for Pence defended the letters, noting they seek information that is available publicly under state laws.

“The commission very clearly is requesting publicly available data in accordance with each state’s laws in an effort to increase the integrity of our election system,” Jarrod Agen, the spokesman, said in a statement. “The commission’s goal is to protect and preserve the principle of one person, one vote because the integrity of the vote is the foundation of our democracy.”

On Saturday morning, Trump tweeted: “Numerous states are refusing to give information to the very distinguished VOTER FRAUD PANEL. What are they trying to hide?”

The request for records drew a new round of scrutiny to Kobach, a candidate for governor of Kansas in 2018 and an intellectual and political leader among conservatives who want to crack down on illegal immigration and the perceived threat of voter fraud.

In 2009, announcing his first bid for secretary of state, Kobach said that registration fraud by the defunct community organizing group ACORN made Americans wonder whether “the next election’s going to be stolen.” In office, Kobach aggressively pursued cases of potential fraud and promoted the “Crosscheck” system to see whether voters had registered in multiple states. But he frequently lost in court, as judges warned that measures meant to keep noncitizens off the rolls were ensnaring too many legitimate voters.

“It looks like they’re putting together a database of who people voted for,” said Jason Kander, a former Missouri secretary of state who runs the nonprofit group Let America Vote. “Democrat, Republican, independent, everybody should be outraged by that. This is from the same people, from Kris Kobach to Donald Trump, who’ve tried to make it harder for people to vote, and this seems like a step in the process. If the Obama administration had asked for this, Kris Kobach would be holding a press conference outside the Capitol to denounce it.”

The idea of collecting all national voter data for an audit has traveled through conservative circles for years. True the Vote, a group that promoted the fear that bogus voter registrations led to stolen votes in the 2008 election, also advanced the theory that millions of illegal votes denied Trump a popular mandate.

True the Vote itself has struggled to keep up momentum from the Obama era. Catherine Engelbrecht, the group’s president, told supporters in a video message last week that True the Vote was not getting the donations necessary to meet its ambitions. The dream of a grass-roots national voter audit was simply not going to happen.

“We have gathered 2016 voter rolls; we’ve gathered information from thousands of resources,” Engelbrecht said. “For us, it’s never been about the headlines, or the promised presidential commissions, or the make-believe Russian hackers.”

Two Democratic members of the commission said in interviews Friday that they were surprised by the backlash to the requests this week.

“We didn’t think there’d be this heartburn over it,” said Arkansas lobbyist David Dunn. “We were asking for information that, in most states, is considered public.”

In West Virginia, Wood County Clerk Mark Rhodes said that he is confused by the angry reaction from some states.

“The request that went out is asking for public information, not any confidential information,” he said. “If you want to make a match, you want to make sure you have enough data to avoid a false positive. In previous data matches, you might be Mark D. Rhodes on your driver’s license and Mark Douglas Rhodes on your voter registration, and you’ve got a problem.”

Experts described the request as unprecedented in scope, a recipe for potential voter suppression and troubling for the privacy issues it raises.

“This is an attempt on a grand scale to purport to match voter rolls with other information in an apparent effort to try and show that the voter rolls are inaccurate and use that as a pretext to pass legislation that will make it harder for people to register to vote,” said Rick Hasen, an election-law expert at the University of California at Irvine.

Hasen said he has “no confidence” in whatever results the committee produces. He said the commission and its request create a number of concerns, including that it is an election group created by one candidate for office — Trump, who already is campaigning for reelection — and headed by Pence, another political candidate.

“It’s just a recipe for a biased and unfair report,” Hasen said. “And it’s completely different from the way that every other post-election commission has been done.”

Justin Levitt, an elections expert at Loyola Law School, pointed to the request about voters’ party affiliations, which he said violates the federal Privacy Act of 1974. Critics also said that because of varying state laws, the commission won’t be able to make an apples-to-apples comparison with the data it collects, which could undermine its eventual conclusions.

The most acute worry Friday was about what the group’s expected report in 2018 will recommend.

“It could end up leading to trying to create a justification for more state laws that restrict voting in very serious and what are proven to be unlawful ways,” said Vanita Gupta, who headed the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division during the Obama administration. “And that’s through all kinds of cuts, through restrictive voter ID laws, through cuts in early voting [and] same day registration.”

Experts also expressed concerns about Trump’s appointment of Hans von Spakovsky, a former Justice Department official and a longtime voter integrity advocate, to the commission. Gupta said that he, like Kobach, has “had a single-minded agenda to diminish voter participation and to fight voting rights, and to make voting harder.”

Kobach’s office did not respond to requests for comment; other members defended the letters.

“You meet people who say: I don’t want to vote, because my vote doesn’t count,” said Dunn, the Arkansas lobbyist. “This commission has been broad-brush painted — and maybe rightly so — as some kind of voter suppression. But I don’t feel like that’s what I’m part of.”

On Friday, as states said they would not participate, White House deputy White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders called that pushback a “political stunt.”

The White House bristled Friday at states refusing to cooperate with the commission.

“I think that that is mostly political stunt,” Sarah Huckabee Sanders, a White House spokeswoman, said when asked about the pushback. “This is a commission that’s asking for publicly available data and the fact that these governors wouldn’t be willing to turn that over — this is something that has been part of the commission’s discussion, which has bipartisan support and none of the members raised any concern whatsoever.”

Other states have said that they do plan to hand over information, albeit less than the broad sweep outlined in the letters. Wisconsin’s elections commission administrator said that the state would give the public information for the standard $12,500 fee, but was not allowed to release other details such as dates of birth. Ohio Secretary of State Jon A. Husted, a Republican, said his state would be handing over most of the requested information — noting that it is publicly available — though he said they would not provide portions of Social Security numbers and driver’s license numbers because those are not.

Husted said in an interview Friday that his office had conducted reviews after previous elections, saying that these investigations have determined that “voter fraud exists, it’s rare and we hold people accountable when we catch them.”

Earlier this year, Husted announced that his office found 82 noncitizens of the United States who illegally voted in a recent Ohio election. According to his office, more than 5.6 million people cast ballots in last November’s general election.

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I would even seriously question the 82 noncitizens claim. Illegal immigrants tend to stay in the shadows, not run from one precinct to the next to illegally vote. And just how many of us have noticed bus loads of foreigners at polling stations? The specter of bus loads of illegal voters is as big a straw man as I have ever heard. Now elections fraud fits with what we are seeing. Suddenly the long history of exit polls coinciding with election results are wrong. Not once but every election. The tallies that show more votes for the republican than are registered in a whole county. And the crosscheck that eliminates double names. Wow, as far as I can tell there are over 10,000 people in this country with the same name as me. The republicans don't like democracy, it is too inconvenient for them, so they have set about destroying it.

voters don't get a coded paper receipt, or any way to check that their vote counted in the way they voted it

too much power and money is at stake; our elections beg to be hacked; our votes beg to be miscounted

25 states use cross-check, which prevents any voter from knowing whether their vote counts, or not

us voters need more protection from fraud in 25 states, than 25 states want to provide!

fitrakis reports that the results in five key states do not match exit polls? who is our elected prez? - it seems 25 states want to prevent us from knowing!

how many juan gonzalezes are there in 25 states? okay, none of their votes counted!

robbee endorses any system that notifies a voter whether or not their vote counted, especially who it counted for; maybe this will encourage hopeless voters and more will vote; in any event every legit voter whose vote was not counted has a cause for action against the undemocratic election that rejected their legit vote! with a coded tracking number, the USPS can tract a package, the same system can track a vote! - NO LEGIT VOTE SHOULD EVER GO UMCOUNTED! DEMOCRACY FAILS WHEN ANY LEGIT VOTE GOES UMCOUNTED! ON THIS, IS ROBBEE CLEAR?

selective service notifies everyone when they turn 18 years old

robbee endorses any system that automatically registers every voter at age 18

robbee endorses any system that federally registers all voters - if any voter moves, before they are eligible to vote elsewhere, they notify the registry

Paper ballots, strict rules to prevent gerrymandering and making voting easier should be the objective of any bipartisan voting rights committee (and not a committee that operates in the dark, like McConnell did to try to pass a cruel health care law, with all meetings and communications open to public scrutiny.)

Trump's so called voting commission exemplifies the total and absolute hypocrisy of the republicans and conservatives who support the GOP. Whatever happened to their supposed obsession with State's Rights? In their endless quest to deny the voting rights of any who disagree with them, (blacks, immigrants, the poverty stricken, the elderly, the disabled and a majority of women), the fascist Kobach and the so-called Christian, Pence, will do anything they can to preserve a republican majority for the House & Senate in 2018.

Pence is pretty much ineffective and an extremely dim bulb but Kobach is smart, dangerous and a serious threat to Democracy.

This commission is based on radical right wing beliefs that when republicans lose elections, voter fraud took place. States that respond positively to commission requests for voter information are already denying the vote to a majority of citizens, I.e. North Carolina, or wish to be able to do so, with impunity.

Paper ballots, strict rules to prevent gerrymandering and making voting easier should be the objective of any bipartisan voting rights committee (and not a committee that operates in the dark, like McConnell did to try to pass a cruel health care law,) with all meetings and communications open to public scrutiny.

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